Title of article :
Impact of Daylight Saving Time on the Clinical Laboratory
Author/Authors :
Ehlers, Alexandra Department of Pathology - University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, IA, USA , Dyson, Richard L. Health Care Information Systems - University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, IA, USA , Hodgson, Christina K. Department of Pathology - University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, IA, USA , Davis, Scott R. Department of Pathology - University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, IA, USA , Krasowsk, Matthew D. Department of Pathology - University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, IA, USA
Pages :
7
From page :
1
To page :
7
Abstract :
Daylight saving time is a practice in some countries and local regions to set clocks forward (typically 1 hour) during the longer days of summer and back again in autumn. Time changes resulting from daylight saving time have the potential to impact clinical laboratory instruments, computer interfaces, and information systems. We analyzed turnaround time data for an academic medical center clinical laboratories (chemistry, hematology, blood gas analyzer, and transfusion medicine), examining how turnaround time was impacted by the daylight saving time shifts in 2017. We also determined whether the daylight saving time shift on November 5, 2017 (“fall back” by 1 hour) resulted in any “absurd” time combinations such as a receipt time occurring “before” a normally later time such as final result. We also describe challenges resulting from daylight saving time changes over a 5-year period. The only significant impact on turnaround time was for clinical chemistry samples during the autumn daylight saving time change, but the overall impact was low. Four instances of absurd time combinations occurred in the autumn time change with only a transfusion medicine example resulting in an interface error (a Type and Screen resulted “before” receipt in laboratory). Over a 5-year period, other daylight saving time impacts included problems of reestablishing interface to instruments, inadvertent discrepancies in manual time changes at different points of the core laboratory automation line, and time change errors in instruments with older operating systems lacking patches that updated daylight saving time rules after 2007. Clinical laboratories should be aware that rare problems may occur due to issues with daylight saving time changes.
Keywords :
clinical chemistry tests , clinical laboratory information system , electronic health record , hematology , software , transfusion medicine
Journal title :
Academic Pathology
Serial Year :
2018
Record number :
2613461
Link To Document :
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